Pure on Olympus shines the sun-touched snow; Or skimmed at eve the glassy waters, where My heart was with thee, Mother! and a sigh,When thou wert standing 'mid thy own home trees, To breathe at day's sweet fall the evening breeze, As the soft south wind kissed thy forehead mild,— Came to thee murmuring from thy absent child, Freighted with longings after days gone by. And oft, how oft, within their festive bowers, I only shared not in the joyance there. I knew them heartless, and I felt them cold, And strange sad visions o'er my soul would come, Of a far land, and of a lowly home,— Of one dear voice that spoke but to approve,— One beaming smile,- one fondly clasping hand! Sweet is the memory of a mother's love— Dwelling with strangers, in a stranger land. Mother! methinks, it is a sacred word :- Of childhood's days,-of first fresh feelings rush Over the heart, as though by magic stirred: The morning prayer when all was soft and still,-— The fond caress when lesson-time drew nigh,— The treasured cake, a balm for every ill,The mild reproof when no one else was by,— The evening walk across the spicy heath,The wild bird's song,-the river's peaceful flow,The hedge be-dropped with many a starry wreath,—— The bank all pale with primroses below. Ah! plodding sadly on life's sterner track, When clouds are dark and thorns bestrew our way, And hope has perished from our path away, How oft the pilgrim with a sigh looks back! A word is breathed,—the key-note of the strain,— And the man weeps, and is a child again. Mother! sweet mother! first and fondest friend, A blessing on his work, with prayers and tears, Inscribes upon his first and fairest page, That name—the holiest—which he most reveres, Which, with a trembling hand and many a fear, Grove House, Richmond, 1836. Introductory Letter - Lake Leman - Theodore d'Aubigny — Introductory Letter-The Brother's Ransom - Barbara Mon- talto Death-scene in a Palace. Page 81 |